Using synesthesia as an organizing principle, the present study analyzes George Herbert’s representations of wisdom, particularly in the poems “Submission,” “The Agonie,” “Divinitie,” and “Charms and Knots.” The trope of synesthesia reflects Herbert’s participation in both Hellenic and Hebraic traditions, for it brings together the rhetorical dexterity celebrated in Hellenic models of oration and the physical dexterity integral to Hebraic ideas of wisdom. Herbert’s synesthetic poetics, then, works not only to gather that which is Hellenic and Hebraic or classical and Christian but also to bridge word and world, spirit and flesh.
Redefining Prophetic Authority in ElizabethBarrett Browning's "A Curse for a Nation" d e n a e d y c K
•I f taKen at face value, the imprecatory wrath called down by the title "A Curse for a Nation" would make this poem, originally published as the lead work in the 1856 issue of the Boston abolitionist annual the Liberty Bell, one of the most hostile compositions ever written by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (hereafter EBB). 1 The poem seems all the more antagonistic in light of its republication as the terminal piece in Poems before Congress (1860), the controversial volume on the Italian Risorgimento ("resurgence" or "rebirth") about which EBB hinted darkly to her sister Arabella in the weeks prior to its publication, "you wont [sic] like it & everybody else in England wont [sic] like me because of it" (Letters to Arabella 2: 444). Despite the battle lines this comment suggests, EBB's poem advances a prophetic and expansive vision of political engagement, one that reflects her self-identification as a "citizenness of the world" who can "float loose," as she playfully described her expatriate position in an 1851 letter to her cousin John Kenyon (The Brownings' Correspondence 17: 70). This fluidity is evident in the dual contexts of the Liberty Bell and Poems before Congress: as readers have long recognized, whereas the former clearly frames the poem's malediction as directed at the United States for its practices of slavery, the latter volume invites an understanding of this curse as a response to England's inaction in the struggle for Italian unification and independence. 2 While this publication history underscores both the international scope and the ambiguity of "A Curse for a Nation," I argue that EBB's provocative politics issue primarily from her innovative use of the trope of redefinition. As signalled by the title's two indefinite articles, "A Curse for a Nation" broadens its animating concepts (curse and nation) as it unfolds. Taken together, these redefinitions widen the poem's prophetic stance: beyond rebuking a single chosen people, "A Curse for a Nation" articulates a pluralistic and inclusive understanding of social justice, one parsed in terms of an unruly variety of Biblical texts. Throughout the poem's prologue, which recounts the primary speaker's dream of a conversation with the angel who instructs her to write the malediction, as well as its two-part curse, EBB revises the jeremiad mode that her title announces. In so doing, she portrays the religious revelation that informs her political message not as a static denunciation victorian review • Volume 46 Number 1 68 but as a transformative dialogue. Extrapolating from the theoretical framework of Mikhail Bakhtin, my essay analyzes the dialogism that sustains the poem's formal patterns and conditions its address to the reader. I thereby aim to show that "A Curse for a Nation" participates in the larger cultural discourse of Victorian sage writing yet exceeds both the oracular voice and the nationalistic scope of this writing as conventionally...
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.